 So, Dr. Vijay has assured me that he'll have the last word today, so I'll be brief. First of all, this event couldn't have been possible without all the help we've had here at ASU and from our partners, our speakers, and all of you as attendees. I do want to single out April Johnson. She's been my right-hand person in organizing this. In addition, Stephanie Calderon, Nicole Hernandez, Craig Woods, my colleague at IFH, as well as the staff here at ASU Health Futures and our live stream team. And Matt, I really want to thank you. I think I can't imagine a better person to come out to really kick off this effort in Arizona. And I have to say, I think we were really lucky to get you and it's really a pleasure to have you here. And in fact, I have to say, I thought your slide deck was a little long until I heard you start speaking and I've never seen someone go through so much so quickly, so effectively. So that was amazing. I wanted to say that, but I'm glad you said it. And I do disagree with your statement that cardiologists are not the sharpest tool in the shed, but otherwise I agreed 100% with what you said. And a couple of observations struck me that we talk about community and I think this is really a good example of our community coming together. We have Arizona Heart Foundation, sonography students here, and that was really kind of a bonus, so thank you. We have practitioners from primary care, from geriatrics, we have advanced practice providers, we have pharmacists. We really have so many people that I think haven't seen in one place. And furthermore, we also have great specialists. I think I probably learned the most from our pathologists or neurologists or hematologists. I think for me as a cardiologist, it was really extremely instructive, but I think I've never had that as well as our primary care representatives. And so in this world of Zoom and post-COVID, it's just so refreshing to be in the room with people. And just a couple of housekeeping, we will have everything available online on YouTube. CME credit will be available if you fill out the survey. So here I'll turn it over to Dr. Vijay. You know, Sandesh already summarized and really appreciated everybody's input. Of course, the input from all the faculty members has really been phenomenal and all the principals are now hopefully getting embedded into our DNA, right? I mean, it's phenomenal. So give all the faculty members a big applause. And of course, applause for the audience here and also the people who are online that Sandesh already met. So give them another round of applause because without you, it wouldn't be possible. You could declare a war and nobody came. You don't mean anything, right? So, and then thirdly, of course, I want to thank and appreciate what Sandesh has done. He's then really aligned all the dots and crossed all the T's and really delivered something phenomenal and brought this program to fruition. So give Sandesh a big, big hand. And finally, you know, I always believed that, you know, being lighthearted, you know, prevents you from heart attacks and strokes. So that's been my philosophy and principle all my life. So be lighthearted, joke around and have fun and do this and do that. And I thought that I was doing pretty good in my practice and engaging patients. Like Matt said, that he could patient's voice and get out of the book, you know, about my own patients and my through my life, calling invoking your inner therapist at the title of my book. I wrote it recently in Heart Failure and for the community and for everybody. And I thought I was doing a pretty good job. And I had this patient who had diagnosed with amyloid and had, you know, severe aortic stenosis, 84 years old. And his wife died 10 years ago and had severe aortic stenosis. He has a loud murmur. He's waiting for a tower and he's hard of hearing. And so he'd come to see me and he's waiting. And so I see him in the mall, you know, I never go to the mall. I said, no, I want you with me. I've got to go somewhere. I said, OK, I'm going to the mall. Suddenly I see this 84-year-old guy with the beautiful young blonde and he's on the other side of the mall and he's like waiting for me. And I said, wait, you know, the doctor, he says, then he'll be later and he comes back to see me and he says, look at him. And I said, you're doing pretty good for yourself, aren't you? And he said, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, doc. I'm following your advice. Following my advice, I'm like, suddenly, I said, what did I say? He said, well, you said, get a hot mama and be careful. And suddenly it occurred to me that between my accent and his hearing, it's got lost in translation. He said, get a hot mama and be careful. No, no, no, I said, you got a hot murmur, be careful. Again, thank you all for coming. Be lighthearted, have fun, have a fantastic day.